You mentioned an additional ground rod at a half mile- How do you do that?
@McCoyFamilyFarm2 ай бұрын
This great! It's like speed dating really good farm ideas!
@bunsuchannel61712 ай бұрын
Thanks ..good sharing..
@charlieabel15333 ай бұрын
All you need is a 2 ft piece of rusty rebar and wrap some polywire around it from the charger.....LOL...that's what lots of folks do! (and wonder why their fence doesn't work)
@boshoffbotha78304 ай бұрын
What weights are we taking about? What are 3-4 frame score?
@CraftyClanLeader4 ай бұрын
Miss ya Mom ❤
@kevinmcgrath10525 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation
@sianne38666 ай бұрын
How to you attach the extra ground rods, where do they hook up to?
@sighfactor6 ай бұрын
Awesome! Thank you!
@joca43446 ай бұрын
Reestablish the dung beetles nation!
@nikolazadro21666 ай бұрын
What a jewel of a video. Incredibly dense with information.
@EganMugalu7 ай бұрын
I love farming
@OrdinaryVisionaries8 ай бұрын
I love your bread and bagels.
@MrFiat124Sport8 ай бұрын
your channel is the best. legendary. thanks from down under!
@DestinationJapan959 ай бұрын
A gold mine of info!
@brettpayton62869 ай бұрын
Just found this channel an love what I'm watching. Curious..... in this situation an video when you talk about loose stools from to much protein, how would you control or change that consumption to allow for better digestion? Normally I'd say hay but it's July.. thank you
@galenhaugh31589 ай бұрын
From my experience, cows should be added to paddocks when the grass is a foot tall and removed when they've eaten the top 6 inches! 2 reasons: 1) most of the nutrients are in the top 6" of the forage, and 2) cows don't like to eat mature forage plants--they're too tough or tasteless. Stems are not where most of the nutrients are found!
@Forester-qs5mf10 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/b2XbaKmvbMyrmaMsi=0qTiPD9Qerzi8-7_ Research proves grazing is carbon sink
@tadficuscactus10 ай бұрын
This guy is a straight up viking!
@allanpennington10 ай бұрын
Im using 2mm high tensile wire for my espalier tiers and the run is 13m long. Im using a ratchet cog strainer at one end to enable tightening. The wire runs through 6 equally spaced L Brackets for support between my fruit trees. What is the best way to terminate this type of wire at the start where its attached to a galvanised L bracket with a hole in it not a post; and then around the shaft of the ratchet. I find it very hard to twist. And I wish I had one of those horizontal spinning feed mechs......I made a hell of a mess when I tried to feed out the first 13m of wire! It only took me an hour to untangle.
@CygnetFarmer10 ай бұрын
Allen Williams is incredibly knowledgeable. I enjoy learning from him.
@ElDuardo0110 ай бұрын
Very valuable, I just bought Sauvory’s book. What else should I check? Cheers from Uruguay
@DestinationJapan959 ай бұрын
What part of Uruguay? Been curious about the best plains and pastures areas as I’m wanting to get residency and start farming down there
@ElDuardo019 ай бұрын
Northern Lavalleja, leave me your email and Ill help you.
@ElDuardo018 ай бұрын
@@DestinationJapan95 Hello, Im in northern Lavalleja, please give me your email and ill be pleased to help you.
@NikiNiaccm11 ай бұрын
I'm not so great at math, so maybe I'm not getting something here. Your chart says that the stand density is per 4" in height. I don't understand why you would multiply 200lbs by 14". Shouldn't you multiply 200 by 14/4 or 3.5?
@jtonofrey9 ай бұрын
i caught that to, i'm pretty sure he just messed up
@ericschafer28711 ай бұрын
Can you correlate forage tests, rumen material tests, and manure tests to establish how forage available translates into 'as eaten' and 'as digested' outcomes?
@ks_hunter732711 ай бұрын
80,000 lbs stocking density vs 500 lbs stocking density. Is amazing.
@theoriginalmonstermaker5 ай бұрын
Yeah, i don't see how those numbers work out. He used the 120 000 lbs and the 1.5 acres, but those cows STILL require the full 3 acres EACH DAY... And then what happens the following day? They're eating half the grass and it can't replenish that quick, so do they then switch to a DIFFERENT 1.5 acres the following morning? Bc however many paddocks you need to rotate through bf returning to the first, THAT is the number you should divide the 120000 lbs by (since THAT is the total acreage required to handle those cattle).
@theoriginalmonstermaker5 ай бұрын
Any minimum, it's 3, so the density in best case is still 40,000, not 80000.
@Americansikkunt3 ай бұрын
80,000 lbs is about 70-80 cattle. Could 70-80 cattle be fed on 1 acre? Doesn’t seem possible….
@user-qx1wl2um2k11 ай бұрын
how long does it take for that snapped off piece to equal a full roll of wire?
@Rustsamurai1 Жыл бұрын
What a very good instructor, thank-you. The Kiwi accent was very thuck, but managed to git it.
@EthanScarlett4 ай бұрын
Def not a kiwi accent at all haha
@Regc10 Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@seanoreilly7123 Жыл бұрын
Brill thanks
@5stardave Жыл бұрын
Steel pipe posts.
@C.Hawkshaw Жыл бұрын
And there’s a lot fewer vet bills, right?
@Yeshuaschosen Жыл бұрын
I've wasted money on the cheap ones but never again.
@harvestvillage695 Жыл бұрын
We keep our fence on all the time to keep the predators at bay. Same reason we use multiple wires. We raise sheep and don't want coyotes getting at them.
@gershhayes796 Жыл бұрын
Wish i had found these earlier. Great stuff.
@gershhayes796 Жыл бұрын
Do you know of anyone doing this in sw florida?
@gershhayes796 Жыл бұрын
Wow am i happy i have found this channel. This stuff is amazing
@triciahill216 Жыл бұрын
How did you achieve so much diversity?
@siennagippert3112 Жыл бұрын
Genius, those are great ideas! I'm going to reorganize my quad setup. Always find myself switching fencing and irrigation.
@robertmtz-pl3ib Жыл бұрын
What is a breed you’re running there? Is that beastmaster?
@WallaceCenter Жыл бұрын
These are South Poll cattle!
@Robertmacmedia Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your great knowledge with us God Bless
@Melidontcare Жыл бұрын
What about freezing in the winter ?
@JohnMarsing Жыл бұрын
give every heifer an opportunity to breed using natural selection phenotype (refers to an individual's observable traits) 3 people they followed 1. Tom Lassiter, founder of the beef Masters. "Mother nature smarter than us all", so I let her do all of the thinking in most of the work. 2. Johan Zietsman, Rancher from Zimbabwe 3. Burke Tiechert, Orem UT,
@TimBinns68 Жыл бұрын
weird way of doing the math but great explanation
@JohnMarsing Жыл бұрын
with cattle that are managed by continuously grazing it takes 27 years to distribute a manure pat every square yard. If however I'm doing mob grazing and moving them every day I can get that distribution in one year and every year ❗
@MistressOP Жыл бұрын
When I see a frog, I go nuts. it sometimes burrows down into my mulch. chilling in my pasture far away from the pond on the other side.
@tanyanixon18963 ай бұрын
The more biodiversity, the better the health.
@MistressOP3 ай бұрын
@@tanyanixon1896 truth. Most farms all had some type of pond in every pasture spread out on the landscape. Including dry ponds that only show up for short times.
@smittys19daytona Жыл бұрын
being on the west coast these pastures are like fantasy Island, every pasture I've seen out here is over grazed to the point you wonder why there even out there, it's just dirt, people just don't have 100 acres to rotate . need to get out of here
@DestinationJapan959 ай бұрын
You don’t need hundreds of acres to fix soil
@gsp8489 Жыл бұрын
Pheasants?
@johndee3301 Жыл бұрын
In a multi-sire setup like this, what is the ratio of active bulls to cows in the pasture?